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Data from Tagged Fish to Help Scientists Enhance Restoration Efforts

September 04, 2024

Project tracks how nearly 400 fish use restored and natural areas near Poplar Island, Maryland.

A woman measures a fish as a man holds the fish on a ruler over a tub of water. Both people are on a boat and are wearing life jackets and hats with large brims. A NOAA Fisheries team checks the length of a fish before inserting a telemetry tag.

NOAA scientists are collaborating with some unique partners to learn more about how several Chesapeake Bay species use natural and restored areas near Poplar Island, on Maryland’s Eastern Shore.

The partners? Nearly 400 fish! 

We have caught, tagged, and released fish to help us learn how they use restored marshes at Poplar Island compared with how they use natural habitat nearby in Back Creek. 

Our “partner” fish carry transmitter tags, which are about the size and shape of a pill capsule. Our team carefully implants the tags into the fish. After being caught and measured, we transfer the fish into a bin with water from the same location where they were caught. Our trained specialist creates a small incision, inserts the tag, and then stitches the incision closed. Only fish that are longer than 8¼ inches are eligible to carry a tag. Then the fish is returned to the same location where it was caught.

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Two people are seating on a center-console boat. A man passes an acoustic telemetry tag to a woman.
David Bruce (left) passes an acoustic telemetry tag—roughly the size of a pill capsule—to Dr. Wilmelie Cruz Marrero (right) so she can surgically insert it into a fish.

We have tagged white perch, red drum, croaker, gizzard shad, striped bass, spot, and American eel. The tags report whenever the fish swims near one of the 15 telemetry receivers in Back Creek, 77 receivers at Poplar Island, or other telemetry receivers in the Chesapeake Bay or beyond. We download the data from the receivers twice each year, and our fisheries biologists then analyze it.

So far, scientists from the NOAA Chesapeake Bay Office have tagged 120 fish in Back Creek. Experts from NOAA’s National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science have tagged 300 fish at Poplar Island. The amount and diversity of fish tagged should give us a full picture of how they use these areas. 

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A man wearing a lifejacket and a wide-brimmed hat, standing on the bow of a small boat, gets ready to toss a fish trap into a creek.
NCBO summer 2024 field ecology intern Oliver Sojka deploys a fish trap as part of the project.

The research will help us understand how these fish use different marsh habitats such as creeks, ponds, edges, and the places where creeks meet the open waters of the Bay. We’ll explore how fish use restored areas at Poplar Island and at natural wetlands at Back Creek. Findings will help us inform resource managers about which designs fish prefer. Then the people who develop the engineering plans will know which features to include in future restoration projects to provide better fish habitat. We’ll also learn more about whether the restored areas are as successful as the natural sites at providing habitat for key species.

The tagging and telemetry project complements other research into where and when fish use human-made and natural habitat near Poplar Island. The project will continue for 2 years. The team is already analyzing initial results. Full analysis and publications are expected by spring 2026.

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A woman on a boat, wearing a wide-brimmed hat and a lifejacket, smiles as she holds a fish.
Dr. Cruz releases each tagged fish with a “thank you for helping us with this science!”

Last updated by NOAA Chesapeake Bay Office on September 05, 2024